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Wiretaps key in conviction of ex-hedge fund giant

Wed May 11, 2011 10:53 AM EDT
us-news, business, us, wall-street, trading, fund, insider-trading, hedge-fund, raj-rajaratnam, wall-street"
Tom Hays, Associated Press
Former hedge fund billionaire Raj Rajaratnam, convicted on all counts in a massive insider trading case, was stung by his own words. AP correspondent Warren Levinson reports.
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showing 1 of 12 photos
<p>Raj Rajaratnam, billionaire co- founder of Galleon Group, enters Manhattan federal court, Wednesday, May 11, 2011, in New York. Rajaratnam faces insider trading and conspiracy charges.  (AP Photo/Louis Lanzano)</p>

Raj Rajaratnam, billionaire co- founder of Galleon Group, enters Manhattan federal court, Wednesday, May 11, 2011, in New York. Rajaratnam faces insider trading and conspiracy charges. (AP Photo/Louis Lanzano)

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NEW YORK — The jury that returned a guilty verdict to all charges against a one-time billionaire hedge fund founder proved to have a voracious appetite for the audiotapes of him talking to fellow traders and friends at public companies about stocks he wanted to trade.

Before they returned the verdict Wednesday against Raj Rajaratnam, jurors listened to 66 taped conversations over 12 days. They heard some of the 45 conversations played during the trial multiple times, enabling prosecutors to declare their maiden effort to use wiretaps to prosecute insider trading cases a huge success. Legal observers agreed.

The office of U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara "took wiretaps for a test drive, and I'd say it was a resounding success," said Stephen Miller, a former federal prosecutor in private practice in Philadelphia.

The tapes were "a gold mine," said Steven Scholes, an attorney in private practice in Chicago who formerly worked in the Securities and Exchange Commission Division of Enforcement. "There's an old saying that you can't cross-examine a tape," he said.

Kenneth Herzinger, another former attorney in the SEC enforcement division, predicted prosecutors will expand the use of wiretaps to other white-collar prosecutions.

"I view the use of wiretaps as a game changer and something that certainly the defense bar has taken notice of and I think that Wall Street has taken notice of," said Herzinger, now a San Francisco attorney in private practice.

But the success of the wiretaps might make some insider trading cases that lack them harder to prosecute, said Rita Glavin, a former federal prosecutor now in private practice.

"It's powerful evidence; you can't deny your words on tape," she said. "Jurors may expect in the future for all insider trading cases to hear wiretaps. If you don't have wiretaps, the government now is going to be at a disadvantage."

The jury convicted Rajaratnam of all 14 counts: five of conspiracy and nine of securities fraud, after relying on the tapes, where the Sri Lankan-born 53-year-old could be heard wheeling and dealing with corrupt executives and consultants — in one case demanding "radio silence" on information that could affect a stock price.

The tapes spelled the demise of a defendant who "was among the best and the brightest, one of the most educated, successful and privileged professionals in the country," Bharara said in a statement. "Yet, like so many others, he let greed and corruption cause his undoing."

Authorities have said the recordings represent the most extensive use to date of wiretaps in a white-collar case. The defense had fought hard in pretrial hearings to keep the evidence out of the trial by arguing that the FBI obtained it with a faulty warrant.

Once a judge allowed the recordings in, prosecutors put them to maximum use by repeatedly playing them for jurors.

Prosecutors had alleged that illegal tips allowed Rajaratnam to make profits and avoid losses totaling more than $60 million. His Galleon Group funds, they said, became a multibillion-dollar success at the expense of ordinary stock investors who didn't have the advance notice he enjoyed of mergers, acquisitions and earnings reports.

On Wednesday, Rajaratnam sat at the defense table, a rarity for him at the trial, and stayed motionless as the verdict was read. Most days, he took an uncustomary position on a bench behind his lawyers.

U.S. District Judge Richard Holwell ruled that Rajaratnam could remain free on $100 million bail as long as he was placed under house arrest at his Manhattan home to await sentencing July 29. Prosecutors said he faces a possible prison term of roughly 16 to 19 years under federal sentencing guidelines. Financial penalties have yet to be determined.

Outside court, with Rajaratnam at his side, defense attorney John Dowd said an appeal will be filed.

The verdict followed seven weeks of testimony. Some of the people who were recorded talking to Rajaratnam pleaded guilty and testified against him.

The defense had argued that the tapes revealed nothing more than that Rajaratnam was doing his duty by asking questions about information already circulating in the "real world" of high finance.

"That happens every day on Wall Street," Dowd told the jury. "There's nothing wrong with it."

In one July 29, 2008, call, Rajaratnam could be heard grilling former Goldman Sachs board member Rajat Gupta about whether the board had discussed acquiring a commercial bank or an insurance company.

"Have you heard anything along that line?" Rajaratnam asked Gupta.

"Yeah," Gupta responded. "This was a big discussion at the board meeting."

Prosecutors sought to maximize the impact of the Gupta tape by calling Goldman Sachs chairman Lloyd Blankfein to testify that the phone call violated the investment bank's confidentiality policies. Gupta, who has not been charged, has denied wrongdoing.

The government also played tapes it said proved Rajaratnam was trading secrets and orchestrating cover-ups with fellow hedge fund manager Danielle Chiesi, who pleaded guilty in the case.

"This stock could go up $10, you know? But we got to keep this radio silence," Rajaratnam said in one tape.

"Oh, please. That is my pleasure," Chiesi responded.

"Not even to your little boyfriends, you know?"

"No, believe me, I don't have friends," she replied.

Rajaratnam advised Chiesi to buy 1 million shares of a tech stock on an inside tip, then sell 500,000 of those shares — a tactic prosecutors say was used to throw regulators off the trail. In another instance, about 30 minutes of calls with an Intel tipster scored Rajaratnam a $2 million windfall on the computer chip-maker's stock, prosecutors said.

Former financial consultant Anil Kumar testified that he and Rajaratnam — his former classmate at the University of Pennsylvania's prestigious Wharton School — broke the law by speaking regularly about the negotiations over the acquisition of ATI Technologies Inc. by Kumar's client, Advanced Micro Devices Inc., before the deal was announced.

"I told him that this was `red hot' and shouldn't be discussed," Kumar said. Later, he said he cautioned the defendant, "This is going to be a complete shock to the industry ... so treat this with the strictest of confidence."

Prosecutors say Rajaratnam raked in $20 million by trading on his advance notice of the ATI-AMD deal. Afterward, he called Kumar at home and said, "You're a star," Kumar told the jury.

When Rajaratnam later informed Kumar that he would be rewarded with a $1 million kickback, "I almost fell off my chair," the witness said.

Rajaratnam was charged in October 2009, days before Galleon, which had up to $7 billion in assets under management, announced that it was shutting down its hedge funds.

The Galleon probe has resulted in more than two dozen arrests and 21 guilty pleas. It also has led to a second investigation aimed at consultants in the securities industry who pass off inside information as the product of legitimate research.

Only Rajaratnam has gone to trial, where he relived conversations that the insiders never suspected were being monitored. On one tape, Rajaratnam sounded sheepish when one particularly effusive tipster praised him for being a star in the hedge fund universe.

"The myth," Rajaratnam said, "is larger than the reality."

___

Follow Larry Neumeister at http://twitter.com/Lneumeister

© 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Public Discussion (27)
GOZO-unlimited

Convicted on all counts! 100 million dollar bail (2 billion bank account) if not remanded...next!

  • 5 votes
Reply#1 - Wed May 11, 2011 11:06 AM EDT
Brian-497171

That account will become a restitution reservoir.

  • 1 vote
#1.1 - Wed May 11, 2011 11:27 AM EDT
devilsadvocates

One down, thousands to go. Send them all the prison and I'm NOT talking "club fed" kinda prison!

  • 4 votes
#1.2 - Wed May 11, 2011 12:50 PM EDT
1standlastword

Yeah. This is something of a victory for main street but it doesn't pale in light of what these fat greasy biatches can do legally to cause suffering and economic hardship for innocent others.

    #1.3 - Wed May 11, 2011 1:39 PM EDT
    Reply
    Little Sure Shot

    Considering that most of that 2 billion was gotten illegally, not one penny of it should be allowed to be used for bail. We have a case going on here, where a city council leader is up on multiple charges of defrauding the city and also gave himself a salary when combined with retirement, medical, and vacation benefits worked out to be over one million a year. The judge, believing his set bail might come from the money he ripped off from the city, refused to let him bond out until he could prove the money did not come from that he stole.

    • 3 votes
    Reply#2 - Wed May 11, 2011 11:26 AM EDT
    J. W. Welch

    Nor should his ill gotten gains be used to pay the lawyers. Twenty Five or so years in the joint might be appropriate.

    He can manage the prison canteen hedge fund.

    • 2 votes
    #2.1 - Wed May 11, 2011 11:30 AM EDT
    Reply
    Brian-497171

    I have been following this case closely.

    Very happy with the verdict. This guy, like too many Wall Street greedbeasts, considered himself a King - and above any laws.

    I hope this sends a powerful message to hedge-fund slimeballs everywhere.

    GO SEC!!!!

    • 4 votes
    Reply#3 - Wed May 11, 2011 11:30 AM EDT
    devilsadvocates

    Brian....Please keep us posted. Thanks. QQ

    • 2 votes
    #3.1 - Wed May 11, 2011 12:53 PM EDT
    Reply
    NC Slim

    Who are the other executives, consultants and Wall Streeters who gamed the system? Freeze their bank accounts, seize all properties, passports and forget electronic monitoring--send them straight to jail.

    • 3 votes
    Reply#4 - Wed May 11, 2011 11:38 AM EDT
    Brian-497171

    Many, many have been busted and were flipped to testify againts Raj. Basically his whole world came crumbling down - deservedly.

    • 2 votes
    #4.1 - Wed May 11, 2011 11:47 AM EDT
    Reply
    PAUL-372271

    Look! another glutenous wall street pig, he should forfeit all of his assests, and share a cell with Bernie Madoff.

    • 3 votes
    Reply#5 - Wed May 11, 2011 12:02 PM EDT
    NC Slim

    Paul--

    We hear Bernie is teaching the crooks how to be bigger crooks...so let's not put them in the same facility in NC. I vote for some GULAG far away and very cold. Single cell for 23 hrs a day.

      #5.1 - Wed May 11, 2011 1:02 PM EDT
      PAUL-372271

      works for me.

      • 1 vote
      #5.2 - Wed May 11, 2011 1:36 PM EDT
      1standlastword

      Yeah. I really like the idea of solitary confinement for these biatches

        #5.3 - Wed May 11, 2011 1:44 PM EDT
        Reply
        BloodthirstySavage

        This flagitious blubber is the anarchy that sits at the spectrum's far right end, or the bondage that awaits furthest to the left. This, comrades, is what is destroying our country. This is what all the other argument is about.

        • 1 vote
        Reply#6 - Wed May 11, 2011 12:44 PM EDT
        nokoolaid-3456719

        after reading about an old man getting arrested this brings back some faith in our government but not much.

          Reply#7 - Wed May 11, 2011 12:47 PM EDT
          BloodthirstySavage

          If you could look at a picture of someone who is as dangerous to our country as a terrorist, would you want to see it?

          Google image search "Danielle Chiesi".

          • 1 vote
          Reply#8 - Wed May 11, 2011 12:56 PM EDT
          1standlastword

          Did you see that movie with Keano Reeves and Al Pachino; the one about the big Wall Street law firm? Remember behind the human appearance they were all satanic monsters. That's what we have here!! Real monsters. And he referred to her boyfriends. Can you image what goes on in her bed...YUCK!!!!

          Usually where you find addictions to money there are also all kinds of other addictions. His is clearly food. I'm guessing hers is sex

          Thanks for the recommendation #8--Bloodthirsty

            #8.1 - Wed May 11, 2011 1:50 PM EDT
            Reply
            Boudicea

            Martha Stewart got a couple years for making seven dollars and this guy fleeces people out of 60 mil and is only looking at 19 years? Here's a thought - take ALL his money, give it to the homeless and make him work in a soup kitchen for 25 years instead.

            • 2 votes
            Reply#9 - Wed May 11, 2011 1:20 PM EDT
            ObservingLifeDeleted
            tmac-425222

            Imagine the effect on our economy if the financial services industry sold stakes in real ventures instead of creating volatile and risky derivative type products that turn investments into a trip to the casino, all the while trying to make the casino appear to be a reputable bank. Now these folks are playing with insurance regulations in several states in an effort to raid insurance reserves.

            Roughly 30 states have passed some type of law to allow companies to set up special insurance subsidiaries called captives, which can conduct Bermuda-style financial wizardry right in a policyholder’s own backyard. - http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42952852/

            • 1 vote
            Reply#11 - Wed May 11, 2011 1:35 PM EDT
            Brian-497171

            our economy

            Well the fact that there is "our economy", and then there is "their economy" is the crux of the problem.

            • 2 votes
            #11.1 - Wed May 11, 2011 1:53 PM EDT
            Reply
            Campground

            This case involves "hedge funds" activity. They and the people who manage them have managed to develop a distasteful and unwelcome shady reputation.

            • 1 vote
            Reply#12 - Wed May 11, 2011 2:05 PM EDT
            FactOfTheMatter

            Enjoy prison fat rich man.

            • 1 vote
            Reply#13 - Wed May 11, 2011 2:08 PM EDT
            nohandouts

            Goldman-Sachs always in the news. Most corrupted company ever. Not surprised many of their employees go on to the top jobs in our government.

              Reply#14 - Wed May 11, 2011 2:34 PM EDT
              Runner99

              The nutty professor gets busted. Good. I hope it's not a slap on the wrist for him but years and years in prison. Wonder how he's going to like jail house grub.

              • 1 vote
              Reply#15 - Wed May 11, 2011 2:50 PM EDT
              ray.burchard

              Then too, how does this incidence of documented corruption represent a corporate anomaly and not greed's rule?

                Reply#16 - Thu May 12, 2011 4:47 PM EDT
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